Categories: HistoryPeople

This Is Who Patrick Devedjian Was

In 1981, ASALA members occupied the Turkish Embassy in Paris and held more than 50 people hostage for 15 hours. Due to this, Patrick Devedjian withdrew from the mayoral election and chose to defend the four young Armenian ASALA members in court.

Devedjian and his team made sure that the ASALA members be called “combatants” rather than “terrorists” in court. If you didn’t know, as per the Geneva Conventions of 1949, a combatant is an individual that has the legal right to engage in hostilities during an international armed conflict.

“It is extremely important that the public understands the essence of this matter and the origins of the Armenian issue. Terrorism and genocide is what has been carried out against the Armenian people. However, the people in front of us are not terrorists – they are descendants of the victims of terrorism and genocide.

When passing the verdict, do not forget that the whole Armenian community of France is in solidarity with the four young Armenians and is sitting with them in the chairs of the accused.

Remember that by judging them, you are also judging those long caravans of exiles whose wanderings ended in this hall today. Today in this room are present all those men whose skulls were smashed by Turkish gunstocks, women with dried tears in their eyes and bloodied stomachs, as well as children swollen from hunger and who died holding their mother’s dried nipples in their mouths.

You will judge them all at once. All their shadows are present near the four Armenian youths because without these shadows, none of the four would have been here.

Do not confuse the victims. The victim is one – an ancient nation with 3 thousand years of history that, with bated breath, is waiting for justice.

Do not be silent and give hope, which in this case means to release the accused,” Devedjian said during the first trial.

During the reading of the verdict, the majority of the participants (Armenians) also got up upon hearing the words “accused, stand up”. And when financial compensation to the Turkish side was mentioned, singer Rosie Armen sang “Wake Up, Lao”, and she was joined by the many voices of those present, including Patrick Devedjian.

Naira Zohrabyan

Vigen Avetisyan

View Comments

  • Please send him Love ...‬
    ‪Love to Patrick Devedjian, The human‬
    ‪He was born with Love ...‬
    He saved imprisoned lives... he thought how to love...
    ‪Born with Armenian Honest Genes...Dedicating Love ...‬
    Caring for genocided Armenians,
    Who lost their Clever Brains, Artful Hands,
    ‪Not forgetting to serve his birthplace-
    Democratic France...Teaching Justice

    Please send him Love ...‬
    ‪He will stay Alive ... ‬
    ‪Who serves humanity will never see sand
    ‪Hence, will live in his Blue Sky
    Helping everyone from above
    Will breathe soft breeze...
    Shinning his face thru sunrays...
    He will stay alive ...‬
    Love~Love~Love~~~
    Nothing but Love~~~

    Love from all people who loved him ‬
    ‪Sylva Portoian, MD‬
    ‪Written instantly
    March 29, 2020‬

Recent Posts

The Land of Kajants: Language, Kings, and Gods

Reconsidering the Language and Sacred Heritage of Urartu in Armenian Historical Thought For more than…

1 day ago

Hayasa-Azzi: A Powerful Armenian Kingdom of the Armenian Highlands

Among the earliest known states of the Armenian Highlands, few are as historically important as…

2 weeks ago

The Frescoes of Dadivank Monastery and the Misinterpretation of Heritage

The medieval monastery of Dadivank is one of the most important spiritual and artistic centers…

3 weeks ago

Armenian Orphan Girls in New York (1917): A Forgotten Act of Witness and Relief

In 1917, at the height of global upheaval during World War I, a small but…

4 weeks ago

The Armenian Genocide: State Crime, Mass Participation, and the Burden of Historical Responsibility

The Armenian Genocide (1915–1921 ...) was not an accident of war, nor a tragic byproduct…

4 weeks ago

The First Printed Armenian Bible (Amsterdam, 1666–1668)

Introduction The first printed edition of the Bible in the Armenian language stands as one…

1 month ago